Sacramento Daily Union, Volume 16, Number 32, 27 September 1882 — PMHHOB. [ARTICLE]

PMHHOB.

I Affair* In <. y ; I Cairo, Renumber 2.'.;h — A Rr.in.l rece{>I ti->n »»■. held at th<> Unezi^r-'h i'ul.ice to-day |by the Khedive. Nearly a r oaund reproj aentativss e> the different vSU i t- •< v.. r< i.r*-;!---ent. Thn Klie Jive r. fuued t» ccc man} Implicated Prtehr.B and Buys *fco ci.'tie to prole-* 1 ■y»lty, anj warned the LTiem s ar:d other hi [h p>rj nifres that ttv 7 w nj t be severely pausbed U t':ev relapsed to dbloyI ally, 'ih? principal British <r.\ .r». with I tbcir atctjf;, were pre=rtit. General Wokeley, hoT.tVir, kcui iud;ep:»,cd acd . b• to attend the oexemosy, »o the t>rer-*ut!i'..!i.'!i to tlio General oj ihe (i.cora'.ion by the Kbediv . did not t^ke pLc. Cairo, Septern'-er 2rtth. — A coliia-oa ocouirad ob the railsay between NcSsche and Mahaatueh to-day ar.d ten Übiivts were kikd. G-eaerat \Vi.is«ley ii soft-jriog froiu a cod aud uUrrbe-i ■■■11-FWI In Ifrlr*. CapeTowx, S.j.t naber 2(ilh.— SmaU-pnxi ■■ raging worse .n <a evec Two thousand aaaai bare been reported .liui far, mwtij nrthrn. Six knadred <f ttom wera fatsL DmiH ease !n. re c' bJ ibe military. Cap* Term it Jeo'areii iafo ■, ted vese«U p.-iir,-! Uta Mto b I** ar? litir ■ qawiatlfceJ. The v:rr" ~ art pfer [s in the moad Bold . Aieasai ■ bar< bees ;■ .; to ezshi di ai ivin? there in*peo( iof having t:ie tnfectioo. The ttreeta ol Capo ram h»»e t. deatrted tppeaxukce, asd budu?Kts id Eufl '. in • . -frt'-ly, A ;f.-.-:i -„..| 1 rout ilir i'urir. C ISBTAOTtMUFLa, .- £6 k, — The I'.i-ic bM addrcßs^d a note to the BritUb fio> L>*-/= :-.i--r (i : . i.i.i'-iliif to kIICW OOBtempUtcd by liij Grjvern ■> in regard to t<« *itMrawal oi Ibe Eriti fa t. iopi ir,.iu l-,'ii>i, ac they are no lorgsr need 1 En tbat v try. Vlninii of iJie Aftm D • i-i->--. CoLll . . f,>:..-:..': . : 86 Jl — Tr.ebody of A 1) . •; i . i', .•!■,. , Oat., • e( f the p " : Asia, hac . . ■ ■ ■' n- iddi '.■. al ■ [i-.-<f!ru oo ' ..e v-sel: •!••;■ ■• . '. . .- Xerrr, Julian Janio, . : ■■■ - >■ t !' i. ■• .f>"i on, <>■ n V..h ?, r B rg St .od Jr., .1 ~ • ; ■ ■ i i : crt t- ..-•., all fruuj •.. i ricii vy . i '■ , Qml . Ini»-.i.'i:l KMteal IT-:r)!re. Woo I r 26 b.— The i. qv. st lai BMlt Ml (he rv baii ■> <■! a jimngf woman named Ellen Windcri-atum, alias Ciujyi, v.ho •ijod nnd^r Fiupuious circuirBtinco?. resulted in the srreat of in old ce^ro rtoctre3B named Munson, at wfco;e house tbo j woman diet). The evidence went to »how thst fjr touie yaace the borne 1 ie been the r »ort of woai-n feekir-,' v- bwinl mnrlkial iid, Beieial de ttbi have tak n pfauM tlujre. IV'ew Canal rriiji-'t-Ceklin, fTiiiilmilm 28tb.— The Govenmeat U devoting ntttnttrn to ibe pr feet for j tha ooßstrootloa of a c»nii c BMctißg the North 3* a »i:.h ire Hal ic. A Plea for Last Kbxobxb — Whsl tiaie could he more appropriate for th"! rerival nf t!ie old nMgettun the present? I The return of ladies to our n&tional chiv- | airy w. old 1) i ml limrtrfl at a royal iady'g | I rule, and thair decora' i^a wtmld imp»rt ' brilliancy to the English Court. Her ' ; ; -tv, in gr-ictias: to the widow! of 1 the gillant men who fall in tr.eir conntrv's lervio ) tro ?;vleand precedence of the I 1 j dignity and r. k Hi >". their hatbande ha»l , f-.»rly iiisT.ted, and woulj birr' got had t'.ey'livtd, h» already prepared the way foe the restoration I venture to puggest. Mv propo»al ia that eaoh of the wives and ! widows rf the knights of the varioua chiv- • iteoi Or.lers of this empire should be aei aorded the privilege of wearing an armlet nf velvet, colored as the ribbon and emhroidered with the motto of the order of i her has-bind. I cannot conceive how any [ valid olijf-euon crmld be raised, or why an observance 80 highly appreciated in the ' chivalrie times of England shooM not find ' j favor in the days of Qaeen Viotoria. — j [Reminiscences, etc. — Sir Bernard, Barke,

Ainsworth's Ldraby. — Harrison Ainswortlh's library had in it hardly one book of conspicuous value. He purchased simply the tools of his literary work— chronicles of crime and court romance and glossaries of slang. Small as was this literary workshop, he depended upon it almost entirely, aud rarely went abroad to study his characters and their language from the life. When he wrote " Rookwood " and "Jack Sheppard " he relied abeolutely on his power of reading up and assimilation, and never had the slightest intercourse with thieves in his life. Is is said that when he wrote the really admirable ride of Turpin to York, he only went at a great pace over the paper with a road map and description of the country in front of him. It was only when he heard everybody say how truly the country was described and how faithfully he had observed distances and localities that he actually drove over the ground for the first time, and declared it was more like his auccount than he could have imagined.